methods of political science

In this piece, Gessen combines the more cultural and institutional approach of Parsons and the more scientific and historical approach of Eberstadt. Parsons attempts to provide what Geertz called a “thick description” by living in Russia and interviewing people who lived through the 1990s. She is effective in shaping a detailed narrative of the time period from her interviews but I think she could have been more effective by including people of various age groups. She only interviews people who were middle-aged in the early 1990s and perhaps the younger generation would have a different and useful perspective. As Eberstadt point outs, it is actually Russia’s young that are facing the effects of depopulation. Parsons also uses the changing political and economic institutions in Russia to explain this phenomenon. Eberstadt is more scientific and historical in that his study is data-driven and he looks at the entire twentieth century instead of the just the 90s. He uses demographic data like birth and death rates to look at Russia’s decades-long problem. He also tries to find a cause through data. Data shows that deaths from cardiovascular diseases and external injuries are much higher in Russia than in other countries of comparable development. However, these don’t seem to result from diet, pollution, or drinking. So Gessen concludes that the problem is in mental health. Although her conclusion is hardly convincing, I don’t think the truth is unreachable. I think we should utilize both cultural and scientific approaches as Gessen has done and keep on going. For me, the next step would be to look at data regarding mental health in Russia.

Russia’s Problem Cannot Be Answered So Quickly

Masha Gessen provides a relatively lengthy discussion in order to analyze Russia’s mortality phenomenon. She does so through various forms of explanation: cultural, institutional, and historical. By discussing Michelle Parsons’ theory on Russia’s death rates, Gessen calls upon Russia’s history. However, the historical context is insufficient to answer the question. Nonetheless, Gessen utilizes this instrument of explanation in conjunction with Russia’s cultural context to get to her conclusion. Interestingly, despite Eberstadt’s attempt to systematically search for an answer to Russia’s epidemic, Gessen’s conclusion is far from scientific. Russians dying from “a broken heart” cannot be proven. But there’s a slight draw to it. We are creatures who search for answers, even when answers cannot be fully achieved. As a writer, I think Gessen is victim to this flaw. It’s hard to write about a topic that doesn’t seem to have a clear outline to it. No one has been able to find the reason as to why Russians are dying so quickly and so young. But she keeps encountering it and it lies heavily on her emotions. Her scope is extremely limited. There is no way for her to come to a conclusion in a matter of one article piece. More research has to be done–moreover, more diverse research should be taken into account. There is no way to acquire the truth with work that is so limited. I think it’s possible for social scientists to find truth in their work, but it must be work that is fully researched, explained, and analyzed.

The Dying Russians

Masha Gessen’s “The Dying Russians” is an example of the potential for truth and explanation that inheres in the encounter between “good journalism” and social science. It is also an fine illustration of how the pursuit of a puzzle—in this case “Why are Russians dying at such high rates, and so young, since 1991?”—can give way to a new and unexpected (if not more harrowing) question, “Why have Russians been dying at such high rates for decades?” The conclusion that the piece reaches is almost lyrical, and possibly not even science. Russians are, it would seem, dying of broken hearts.

Assess the piece from the perspective of this week’s discussion of the nature of science and methodology. How are cultural, institutional, or historical instruments of explanation brought to bear on the analysis, and are they effectively used? Is there a “truth” that lies beyond the grasp of social science, or even medical science. If so should we stop striving for the unreachable? You might want to keep in the back of your mind Ian Shapiro’s entreaty that we adhere to “problem-oriented research” rather than “method-driven” political science. (“…if one’s only tool is a hammer, everything in sight starts to look like a nail.”

Photo:  “Dynamo” factory workers listening about the death of Joseph Stalin, 1953 by Dmitry Baltermants